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POET AND PATRONS

SELECTED LETTERS OF ROBERT, BURNS, edited and with an introduction by DeLancy Ferguson; the World’s Classics, Oxford University Press, English price \5/-. IKE most writers who have laid hold on popular imagination, Robert Burns has been mythologised in various roles-as. a gentle nature lover, as a drunken blackguard, as a peasant moralist dragged down by his own weakness

(Carlyle’s view), as a social revolutionary stifled but not silenced by poverty and piety. Each represents the natural attempt of men to simplify a complex phenomenon in accordance with their own wishes and prejudices. But as Professor Ferguson points out in his brief and vigorous introduction there were several factors in Burns’s environmertt which made it unusually difficult for him to. reach equilibrium in his life and in his art. The social] position of a peasant farmer in 18th Century Scotland was rigidly determined. Thus Burns throughout his life was obliged to show assiduous respect to men and women who were intellectually vastly his inferiors. His very livelihood, and the survival of his family, depended on it. He writes to one patron: "Sir,-The language of Gratitude has been so prostituted by servile adulation and designing flattery, that I know not how to expréss myself when I would acknowledge » the receipt of your last letter... Such language, from a man who could handle language like a rapier or a flail, betrays the fundamental falseness of his position. His letters show more plainly than his poems how much of his egalitarianism, his touchy self-esteem, and even his addiction to the cult of sensibility, sprang from the deep humiliation of being forced to flatter. In his letters to Agnes McLehose and Mrs. Dunlop, deference and sensibility are the keynote-partly, one feeis, an artificial emphasis, but partly an expression of his natural impulse. It is, however, in the autobiographical sketch sent to Dr. John Moore, and in the letters written to relatives or to friends with whom no social barrier existed, that Burns’s prose expression gains its full balancepungent, concrete, large in reach, and immensely vital. One ends by regarding Burns not only as a great poet and a ‘gifted raconteur, but also as no mean

philosopher.

James K.

Baxter

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.I whakaputaina aunoatia ēnei kuputuhi tuhinga, e kitea ai pea ētahi hapa i roto. Tirohia te whārangi katoa kia kitea te āhuatanga taketake o te tuhinga.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZLIST19540212.2.20.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Listener, Volume 30, Issue 760, 12 February 1954, Page 10

Word count
Tapeke kupu
367

POET AND PATRONS New Zealand Listener, Volume 30, Issue 760, 12 February 1954, Page 10

POET AND PATRONS New Zealand Listener, Volume 30, Issue 760, 12 February 1954, Page 10

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